Urashiro Nobeoka, a Progressive City in Japan - English Classes: Tel: 0982-34-5666 - Howard Ahner

"Earthly desires are enlightenment; the sufferings of birth and death are nirvana."
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Zaikouji Youchein, Hyuga January 22, 2009
"Earthly desires are enlightenment; the sufferings of birth and death are nirvana."
August 2008 Videos
Takoyaki Stand in Kadogawa Town has been closed down.
Double Decker Gasoline Stand in Japan Still Exist in Nobeoka
You can gamble on the horses in Kadogawa at a Keirin place in Kadogawa Cho.
Nobeoka Salmon is Delicious!
How does one process one's rice in Japan?
A Typical Bus Stop in Totoro Town, Nobeoka, Japan
Nobeoka Strawberries
The Kadogawa Homewide used to be on this location. Now there is a Lawson Convenience Store
A Good Friend
Kobato in February, 2008
We went shopping at Point Peg in Nobeoka City, Miyazaki
We seldom go to this Joyfull Restaurant in Idekita, Nobeoka City, Miyazaki Ken
Here's a walk-over bridge in Nobeoka City, Japan
Here's the Joyfull Restaurant near the road to Takachiho in Nobeoka.
Let's study at Sazanpia, Nobeoka.
There's an Okonomiyaki restaurant over there that I like very much. It's in Nobeoka.
This used to be the "Anne's House" of Nobeoka. Do you know the one on Beach Blvd in Buena Park, CA?
Here's the only Surfer's Shop in Nobeoka.
This Nishi No Maru Pachinko Parlor in Nobeoka is still closed.
And, yes, they even have a Colonel Sander's in Nobeoka.
This is perhaps the bussiest Pachinko Parlor in Nobeoka City.
Gasoline is going down in price. It's now 93 yen a liter. A liter is about a quart, I believe.
Some of you old timers may remember the motorcycle hanging from that yard arm over there.
I am still living easy in the city of Nobeoka, Japan.
The old Chalon Restaurant has been turned into a "rotary sushi bar".
At this Pachinko Parlor, the steel balls now cost 1 yen each. They used to cost 3 yen each.
And, we do have a Mr. Donut here in Nobeoka. We are not barbarians, you know.
In Nobeoka, we even have a Baskin Robin's - 31 Flavors ice cream parlor.
Moss Burger is the closest thing to a good hamburger joint one can find in Nobeoka City, Miyazaki
Old Ahner Family Pictures
Mondays at 5:30 pm at the Ahner House in Tsurugaoka, Nobeoka for English Classes
Urashiro Excursion on February 20, 2008 (My Birthday!)
Old Nobeoka
Granite City, Illinois
Hitting Home Runs
The Embankments of Faith
A Father Takes Faith
A Sage Perceives the Three Existences of Life
A Ship to Cross the Sea of Suffering
A Warning against Begrudging One's Fief
An Outline of the Zokurui and Other Chapters
Aspiration for the Buddha Land
Banishment to Sado
Beneficial Medicine for All Ills
Bestowal of the Mandala of the Mystic Law
Bodhisattva Hachiman
Clear Sake Gosho
Urashiro Link
A & A Hotel has been replaced by Urban Hotel in Nobeoka

The Receipt of New Fiefs

 

I have received one kan of coins. So your lord has granted you new fiefs! It seems as though it could scarcely be true; it is so amazing that I wonder if I may not be dreaming. I hardly know what to say in reply.

 

The reason is, people throughout Japan as well as those in Kamakura, even those in your lord's service, including the scions of his clan, all disapproved of you because of your belief in Nichiren's teaching. Your continued faith appeared incomprehensible. The mere fact that you were permitted to remain in your lord's clan at all was a cause for astonishment. Moreover, whenever your lord offered to grant you an estate, you invariably declined to take it. How strange your fellow samurai must have thought your refusal, how outrageous it must have seemed to your lord!

 

Such being the case, I was anxious about how you would fare this time, and in addition, I learned that dozens of your fellow clansmen had slandered you to your lord. I therefore thought you would not possibly be able to obtain a fief; the gravity of your situation seemed overwhelming. Moreover, even your own brothers abandoned you. And yet, in spite of all this, you have been granted such favor. No honor could be greater than this.

 

You say that your new domains occupy an area three times the size of Tono'oka. There is a man from the province of Sado who is now staying here [in Minobu] and who knows that area thoroughly. He tells me that, of the three villages, the one called Ikada is first rate. Although its fields and paddies may be few, its profits are immeasurable. Two of the fiefs each annually yield a harvest worth one thousand kan, and the third, three hundred kan. Such, he says, are the merits of your estates.

 

In any event, you had been forsaken by your fellow samurai as well as by the people close to you, and they mocked you for their own amusement. Under the circumstances, an official letter granting you any sort of fief, even had it been inferior to Tono'oka, would have been welcome. Yet, as it turned out, your new domains, combined, are three times as large [as Tono'oka]. No matter how poor these estates might prove to be, you must not complain of it, not to others nor to your lord. If you repeatedly praise them as excellent lands, your lord may grant you still more fiefs. But if you speak of them as poor lands with only a meager yield, you will certainly be forsaken by both Heaven and other men. You should bear this in mind.

 

King Ajatashatru was a worthy man, but because he killed his own father, at that very moment Heaven should by rights have abandoned him, and the earth should have split open to swallow him up. However, because of the merit that his father, the murdered king, had acquired by making five hundred cartloads of offerings to the Buddha every day for the space of several years, and because of the merit he himself would later gain by becoming a patron of the Lotus Sutra, Heaven did not abandon him, nor did the earth swallow him. In the end, rather than falling into hell, he became a Buddha.

 

Your case is similar to his. You were forsaken by your brothers, resented by your fellow samurai, persecuted by the scions of the clan, and hated by people throughout Japan. Yet, on the twelfth day of the ninth month in the eighth year of Bun'ei, between the hours of the Rat and the Ox (12:00 A.M. to 2:00 A.M.), when I, Nichiren, had incurred the displeasure of the government authorities, you accompanied me from Kamakura to Echi in Sagami Province, holding fast to my horse's bridle. Since you thus proved yourself to be the most worthy ally of the Lotus Sutra in all the world, no doubt Bonten and Taishaku could not bring themselves to forsake you.

 

The same holds true with your attainment of Buddhahood. No matter what grave offenses you might have committed, because you have not gone against the Lotus Sutra but showed your devotion by accompanying me, you will without a doubt become a Buddha. Yours is like the case of King Utoku, who gave his own life to save the monk Kakutoku and became Shakyamuni Buddha. Faith in the Lotus Sutra acts as a prayer [to attain Buddhahood]. Above all, strengthen your seeking mind for the Way even further, so that you can attain Buddhahood in this lifetime.

 

No happier thing has ever happened to any member of your lord's clan, whether priest or layman. In speaking thus [about receiving the new fiefs], one may appear to be overly concerned with mundane desires, but for common mortals, such desires are only natural, and moreover, there exists a way to become a Buddha without eradicating them. The Fugen Sutra, in a passage that explains the heart of the Lotus Sutra, states, "Even without extinguishing their earthly desires of denying the five desires,..." And the Great Teacher T'ien-t'ai's Maka Shikan reads, "Earthly desires are enlightenment; the sufferings of birth and death are nirvana." Bodhisattva Nagarjuna's Daichido Ron, in explaining how the Lotus Sutra surpasses all the rest of the Buddha's lifetime teachings, says, "[The Lotus Sutra is] like a great physician who changes poison into medicine." This means that a physician of lesser skill can cure ordinary illness with medicine, while a great physician can cure even grave illness with virulent poison.

 

Nichiren

 

The tenth month of the firt year of Koan (1278), cyclic sign tsuchinoe-tara

  

I chant Nam Myoho Renge Kyo

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...we made it to Shima No Ura, Nobeoka...

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...in fact, I did hit a grand slam while playing for the Giants in Little Leage, Santa Ana, CA...

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Come and study English with us! Tel: 0982-34-5666 in Nobeoka...

I chant Nam Myoho Renge Kyo